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Acupuncture and Astrology:
The Decumbiture Interface
J. Lee Lehman, Ph.D.
Copyright 2000 J. Lee Lehman
The interface of Eastern and Western medicine is not always happy or stress-free.
Traditional Western medicine (TWM) and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) share
many points in common, but they are separated by points equally diverse.
Nowhere is the frustration more evident than in the differing concepts of elements: the
so-called five element system of the Chinese, versus the four element system of the West.
Indian medicine (ayurveda) also has a five element, as well as the three element, system.
The Indian five element system includes the four Western elements plus ether; thus, this
represents a relatively easy accommodation to Western eyes, a fact which should not be
surprising, given the known cross-fertilization of Greek and Indian culture in the time of
Alexander the Great and subsequently.
The Chinese five elements do not match so well. The elements are fire, earth, metal,
water and wood. Three of the elements appear superficially to be the same, but the use of
the same words (in translation, of course) actually disguises a number of differences.
Perhaps the greatest difference is provided by the work element itself: the Chinese were
not attempting to define fundamental units of matter by the clusters which are translated
using the word “element” in the West: perhaps the word “complexes” would come closer
to the mark. And unlike the ayurvedic system, that posits that humoral type or
complexion is fixed at birth and essentially unchanging through life, TCM recognizes
that change occurs all the time through environmental and other influences.
Consider Table 1, which shows some of the qualities of the five elements. Even this list –
which is quite short considering the number of properties broken out by element – shows
that there is no direct equivalency with the Western four element system. Even the
familiar-looking elements like fire don't "work" completely: who would pick Cancer- and
Virgo-ruled small intestines for fire using Western considerations?
Chinese
Element
Wood
Metal
Fire
Water
Earth
Season
Color
Yang Organ
Yin Organ
Orifice
spring
autumn
summer
winter
Indian
summer
green
white
red
black
yellow
Gall bladder
Large intestine
Small intestine
Bladder
Stomach
Liver
Lung
Heart
Kidney
Spleen
Eyes
Mouth
Ears
Urinary
Nose
Lehman
1 -
Consider next the great unity/dichotomy of Chinese thought: Yin and Yang. What does
this correspond to in Western systems? Consider some keywords:1
Yang: East, South, bright, hot, light, fire, exterior, animal, aggressive, spicy, sweet,
Summer, ascending, right, expansion, Sun
Yin: West, North, dark, cold, heavy, water, interior, vegetable, receptive, sour, bitter,
salty, Winter, descending, left, contraction, Moon
The list makes Yang look like Fire and Yin like Water, but what about Air and Earth? It’s
tough to translate a pair into a set of four, or two pairs of two, if you count the pairs of
qualities, hot-cold and wet-dry.
The best place to look for an interface is not here, but at an organ/meridian level. Chinese
medicine has twelve meridians. Ten of them are associated with actual organs, or organ
systems. If we take the meridian, and then apply its Western planetary rulership, now we
can create a bridge between the two methodologies, as shown in Table 2.
Chinese Meridian
Heart (yin/fire)
Small Intestine (yang/fire)
Lung (yin/metal)
Large Intestine (yang/metal)
Spleen (yin/earth)
Stomach (yang/earth)
Liver (yin/wood)
Gall Bladder (yang/wood)
Kidney (yin/water)
Urinary Bladder (yang/water)
Pericardium (yin/fire)
Triple Warmer (yang/fire)
Western Planetary Ruler
Sun
Mercury/Moon
Jupiter
Mercury/Moon
Saturn
Moon
Jupiter
Mars
Venus
Moon/Saturn
??
??
Once we can move back and forth, we can use the strengths of each system to bolster
each other. From an astrological perspective, we can use the chart for a Decumbiture (a
crisis point in a dis-ease) to understand the organ systems affected. Knowing the organ
systems, we can go to the Chinese system to bolster these organs, whether through
acupuncture, acupressure, moxibustion (burning mugwort directly on the skin) or herbs.
We can also use the delineation of the natal chart to predict which organ systems are
likely to produce chronic conditions, which means that the individual who learns the
Chinese system of pulse diagnosis can use these as an early warning system for
conditions which may become chronic.
1
From: Michael Tierra and Lesley Tierra. Chinese Traditional Herbal Medicine. Lotus Press:
Twin Lakes, WI.
Lehman
2 -
How do we use the astrology to do this? A skillful integration of concepts from both sides
of the Oriental/Occidental divide can help us. Consider the heart. TCM teaches that there
are diseases of excess, and diseases of deficiency; furthermore, TCM teaches that a major
problem does not just occur without warning: a dis-ease has to penetrate the body’s
defenses in order to manifest internally. As a result, there will be early warning signs as
the invader attempts to take hold. TCM groups yang organs with yin organs; the yang
organs are more external. The yin organ heart is associated with the yang organ small
intestine. Thus, a change in the pulse associated with the small intestine can indicate that
a relatively small problem could become worse if allowed to continue.
Astrologically, we associate the heart with the Sun. The two signs in which the Sun is
considered strongest are Leo and Aries. Does that mean people of these signs never have
heart attacks? No! A “strong” (meaning dignified) heart can be subject to conditions of
excess, just as a “weak” (meaning debilitated) heart, as symbolized by the Sun in
Aquarius or Libra, can be subject to diseases of deficiency.
Does the Sun have to be associated with the 6th House to manifest possible disease
conditions? Obviously, this makes the situation more serious, but the fact is that any
planet that has either high dignity or debility can produce chronic dis-ease conditions.
This effect will be magnified if associated with the 1st House (health) as well as the 6th
House (disease).
Lehman
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